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"The film opens with yet another voice over narration by Morgan Freeman, extolling the saintly virtues of a white person who deserves our reverence."
—Roger Ebert reviewing The Bucket List
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"Friendly black optimistic advice"
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In order to show the world that minority characters are not bad people, one will step forward to help a "normal" person, with their pure heart and folksy wisdom. They are usually black and/or poor, but may come from another oppressed minority. They step (often clad in a clean, white suit) into the life of the much more privileged (and, in particular, almost always white) central character and, in some way, enrich that central character's life. If the Magical Negro (also known as Magic Negro or Mystical Negro) is from a society of Noble Savages, expect an Anvilicious Aesop about the failings of the protagonist's society — which usually leads to the protagonist "Going Native".
With such deep spiritual wisdom (and sometimes — though not always — actual supernatural powers), you might wonder why the Magical Negro doesn't step up and save the day himself. This will never happen. So enlightened and selfless is he that he has no desire to gain glory for himself; he only wants to help those who need guidance...which just happens to mean those who are traditionally viewed by Hollywood as better suited for protagonist roles, not, say, his own oppressed people. In fact, the Magical Negro really seems to have no goal in life other than helping white people achieve their fullest potential; he may even be ditched or killed outright once he's served that purpose. If he does express any selfish desires, it will only be in the context of helping the white protagonists realize their own racism and thereby become better people.
This can work somewhat as An Aesop about tolerance and not dismissing individuals from underprivileged groups, and it's certainly an improvement on earlier tendencies to either never depict minority characters at all or make them all villains. However, ultimately it's usually a moral and artistic shortcut, replacing a genuine moral message with a well-intentioned but patronizing homage to the special gifts of the meek. Minority characters still all too often aren't portrayed as the heroes of their own stories, but as helpers of standard white, able-bodied, middle-class heroes, and they aren't depicted as, you know, actual people with their own desires, flaws and character arcs, but as mystical, Closer to Earth plot devices.
See also Whoopi Epiphany Speech, Black Best Friend, and Mammy. For a similar trope about women, see Manic Pixie Dream Girl (as well as Disposable Woman and The Bechdel Test); the Magical Girlfriend may play a similar role for her love interest, but is not necessarily an example of this. For the gay version see Magical Queer (who may also be black). The disabled version of this is Inspirationally Disadvantaged. When a non-minority character is portrayed this way, the character is usually a Sidekick Ex Machina. Similar in vein to the Magical Native American, though that trope tends to be more explicitly magical. Also similar to Magical Asian, when an Asian character, often with supernatural abilities, fulfills a mentor role to a white character. Another related trope is White Man's Burden, where the plot is about an ordinary white person who befriends an underprivileged minority character.
The term "Magical Negro" was popularized by Spike Lee during a lecture denouncing this trope.
NOTE ON WRITING EXAMPLES FOR THIS PAGE: Merely having supernatural powers is neither necessary nor sufficient to make a minority character an example of this trope. Simply being a minority character who plays a mentor role is also not sufficient. Think carefully before you add a character to this list just because they're black and serve as a mentor and/or use magic.
Comic Books[]
- In the story "Batman R.I.P.", Bruce Wayne is found lost on the street with no memory of who he is, when he comes across a black homeless man named Honor Jackson. Honor helps Bruce start his path to recovery, but then disappears and is revealed to have already been dead. However, while it looks like this trope at first, it's actually a subversion - it's eventually revealed that Honor is looking for his own personal redemption, saying that he'd never done anything he could be proud of, but was now happy to save one man's life.
- Ali Ka-Zoom from Seven Soldiers fits this trope. He even appears to be acting as a wise mentor of sorts to Shining Knight at the close of the book.
- Yinsen from Iron Man's origin, who exists only to be very wise and honorable and then die so Iron Man can get motivated to kick evil ass, is an Asian version of this. (He has since been retconned to Afghan rather than East Asian, and was played by Shuan Toub in the 2008 film.)
- What If ... Captain America Fought In The Civil War? reduces Falcon to a cross between a Magical Negro and a Magical Native American (in this version he was raised by the Shawnee tribe and became a shaman). He gives Steve Rogers a speech about seeing the similarities in people, uses his mystic abilities to give Steve superpowers, and then gets killed.
- In Neil Gaiman's The Sandman series, the character Maisie Hill in the Game of You story arc (otherwise known as the I-don't-like-dogs-lady) changes one main character's perceptions of "subway people" and literally saves another main character's life with the sacrifice of her own.
Film[]
- Morgan Freeman:
- The Bruce/EvanAlmighty films, where the main characters are selfish white guys who need his assistance to find wisdom.
- Driving Miss Daisy is very close to this trope, but Freeman's character gets a bit too much of his own character development to qualify.
- The Shawshank Redemption — Interestingly enough, it is inverted here: Red is the narrator, everyman, and a murderer, while a fellow white prisoner, Andy Dufresne, is the suffering saint that re-ignites his hope.
- Wanted. Actually a subversion, since he's manipulating the Fraternity for profit, and all his talk about "destiny" and "duty" turns out to be a smokescreen.
- Million Dollar Baby — He finally won the Oscar for the version of this role.
- Really, just Morgan Freeman. If you're looking for a pure hearted mentor chock-full of folksy wisdom, who may or may not have magical powers, you can't do much better.
- Adam — Harlan.
- The Adjustment Bureau — Harry Mitchell, the Adjuster who decides to help David.
- American History X — Lamont.
- Arthur and the Invisibles — How about the Bogo-Matassalai?
- The Basketball Diaries – Ernie Hudson plays the only black character in the film, who does a lot to help the protagonist.
- Because of Winn-Dixie — Gloria is a fourfer: blind, black, female, and a dry alcoholic.
- Bedazzled — The prisoner is implied to be God himself.
- The Defiant Ones: Sydney
- Do the Right Thing — Averted by Ossie Davis. Surrounded by a mostly black cast, he is merely the voice of reason.
- Dogma — Rufus is somewhat of a parody. And according to Rufus, Jesus is the Ur Example. Taking in consideration the Brazilian movie O Auto da Compadecida, it could be taken literally.
- The Family Man: Cash
- Final Destination — The mortician subverts this trope, not only in the fact that his advice essentially boiled down to "you're all screwed, but have fun trying to stay alive", but also by the Alternate Character Interpretation that he is death taunting them for giggles.
- Gladiator — Djimon Hounsou also seems to be playing this sort of role A LOT since his role as Maximus' friend.
- The Green Mile has a character who is simultaneously a Magical Negro and The Rainman. Stephen King is a repeat offender with this one.
- Inverted in Finding Forrester, when Sean Connery plays a mysterious white man with incredible writing ability that helps a clueless inner city youth (black) become a famous writer and the man now, dog.
- The Hudsucker Proxy — Moses the clock worker. He provides sagely narration in a stereotypical patois, is satisfied coaxing the protagonist to success, and apparently has the unexplained power to stop time by obstructing the gears of the Hudsucker Building's clock. He's a bit of a parody of the trope, though, by being a blatant, literal Magical Negro.
- Hand That Rocks The Cradle — Solomon is an example of this character type as well.
- Happy Gilmore — The handicapped (black) golf instructor/mentor Chubbs Peterson, whose hand got eaten by a crocodile.
- Hitch manages to subvert this trope just by changing the focus. Will Smith plays a character whose job is literally teaching white guys how to be as cool as he is - he's a "date doctor" who coaches socially clueless men on how to woo women. However, since Hitch himself is the protagonist, not the white guys — and, accordingly, he gets a real character arc instead of remaining a static figure — he's really not at all a Magical Negro.
- Holy Man starring Eddie Murphy.
- Jim Sheridan's In America — Mateo. Despite his appearance as Starving Artist, he turns out to really be one of those Rich People, so he's able to pay the Sullivan family's hospital check. Along with teach the family's father how to feel again.
- The Legend of Bagger Vance: Bagger Vance; notably, the film is very loosely based on the Bhagavad Gita, with Vance in the role of Krishna, so it's implied that Bagger Vance is actually God. Admittedly, this is a fairly appropriate translation of the original story. The easiest way to get Western audiences to understand the extreme social distance between the prince Arjuna and his charioteer is to portray "R. Junnah" as white and "Bagger Vance" as black in the Jim Crow South.
- The Matrix has some interesting cases. Morpheus comes very close to being one, but he does ultimately have his own goals and character arc independent of helping Neo. The Oracle, however, is an absolutely textbook example in the first movie, although the sequels give her a wider role.
- Not Another Teen Movie has a parody of a Magical Negro in the "Wise Janitor"...played by Mr. T.
- O Brother, Where Art Thou? kicked off with a Magical Negro version of Teiresias from Homer's Odyssey. A bit of a parody.
- A Patch of Blue — Played with. Selina, who is blind, white and incredibly sheltered, thinks Gordon is this (in a good way), but he's really just a regular, non-stereotyped guy who wants to help her become independent.
- Pirates of the Caribbean — In the second film, the black voodoo lady Tia Dalma seemed to be a Magical Negro. However, the third film revealed Tia Dalma to actually be the sea goddess Calypso who is searching for a way to be freed from her mortal body, and she's not necessarily on anyone's side but her own.
- Puma Man — Vadinho, whose job it is to hand the protagonist the magic belt with the mystical powers of the Puma Man and make him realize his destiny without using these awesome powers for himself, instead becoming the hero's Sidekick. The problem is, the hero is so ineffectual that Vadinho ends up looking like The Hero by comparison and making the film unintentionally subvert the trope.
- Radio, the 2003 film. Despite being based on the true story of James Robert "Radio" Kennedy.
- Something the Lord Made — A historical/film example, which seems to play with or subvert the trope. It tells the story of a white surgeon (Alan Rickman) aided in his cardiac research by a black assistant (Mos Def) who is clearly the greater genius of the two. However, against type, the black assistant is not shown as being happy having another take credit for his work, but realizes this is the only way for him to do what he is interested in rather than being a janitor. There is also an implication that despite his goodness and supposed liberalism, the white doctor was essentially a plagiarist taking advantage of the racist system. Based on the true story of Vivien Thomas and Alfred Blalock, whose relationship the Wikipedia summarizes as "complicated and contradictory".
- Song of the South — Uncle Remus epitomizes this trope, a key reason why the movie isn't seen much today. Even the horrors of Jim Crow can't dampen his determination to be a cheerful mentor to white children.
- The Twilight Zone — There was that guy from the 2nd segment of the movie.
- Unbreakable: Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson), the black and physically-handicapped mentor to Bruce Willis' is one of these. Until the ending when it's brutally subverted. He is revealed to be an Evil Genius who has been murdering and destroying in the hope of finding a "True Superhero," and any help he gives Bruce is purely manipulative. All he wanted to do is find his opposite, because it meant there was a reason for someone like him to exist.
- Waiting... had Bishop, a ridiculously blatant execution of this trope. Seriously, he existed only to give complex advice to everyone's social and psychological problems, and did so with a calm, deep-voiced, wise demeanor.
- Shaquille O'Neill in Kazaam, though there's plenty of Unfortunate Implications.
Literature[]
- Stephen King seems to have issues on this subject; many of his writings and their film adaptations include examples of this trope. To be fair to King, he does acknowledge his tendency to write characters such as Dick Hallorann and Mother Abigail as superblack heroes (his words) and says they are products of his white liberal guilt.
- The Green Mile: John Coffey, the gentle black man who calmly dies so as not to cause a fuss while using his powers to help those who guarded his cell. There is a Christ-metaphor at work there, subtly (?) showing the white audience how their structural racism killed Coffey.
- The Stand: Mother Abagail, elderly and black; Nick Andros, deaf-mute; Tom Cullen, mentally disabled. Abagail is arguably an aversion, since she's pretty much the single most powerful person in Boulder. Also averted in that we spend quite a lot of time inside Mother Abigail's head, and her self-doubt complicates the situation for the heroes in the second act. But other than that, yeah.
- Don't forget Joe, a twelve-to-fourteen-year old who, due to trauma, regressed into a non-speaking, sometimes violent savage. Larry at one point realizes that Joe is reading his mind.
- Dreamcatcher: Dudditz, saintly brain-damaged kid.
- Magic, mentally disabled guys are arguably a literal trope in themselves with Stephen King. They seem to have special immunity to dark magic and what-not.
- The Talisman (and to a lesser extent the sequel Black House): Young, white hero Jack Sawyer is guided along his way by aging blues-man Lester "Speedy" Parker and his Territories twinner, Parkus.
- The Dark Tower: Sheemie Ruiz, the slightly retarded psychic and teleporter. Avoided, however, with Susannah.
- But he manages to mostly avoid doing it in It, with Mike Hanlon, who, while sage-like, is a very active participant in the big battles and doesn't even die!
- He may be a bit of a partial example; while everyone else in the Loser's Club leave Derry, and many of them lead successful lives, he's the only one who stays and lives in poverty as a librarian. Even more egregious because he was one of the smartest of the group. And in the end he doesn't even participate in the final battle, having been hospitalized.
- Duma Key is about a man who loses an arm and gets serious brain damage in a construction accident. He also gets mysterious painting powers along with it. He's not the sidekick; he's the main character.
- Let's not forget Dick Hallorann from The Shining.
- In Boy's Life by Robert McCammon, Moon Man and The Lady are typical Magical Negroes.
- Uncle Tom, from Uncle Tom's Cabin, who refused to escape from being sold to protect two other slaves (Eliza and her son Harry) who did escape — and served as a moral inspiration to his first new masters, the St. Clare family, before his final martyrdom at the hands of Simon Legree. And even then, he managed to convert Quimbo and Sambo, the ones who actually beat him to death per Legree's orders. This reflects some early Christian martyr stories, where those doing the killing subsequently convert precisely because of it. The trope is more evident in the stage adaptations of the original book. The original Tom was intended as more of a Christ figure.
- Brom's The Plucker, despite being beautifully written and illustrated, unfortunately casts the character Mabelle as a blatant Magical Negro: she uses forbidden magic to help the white family, then dies unpleasantly and returns as a ghost to tell the little boy how to dispose of the Big Bad's remains.
- The title character in Bernard Malamud's short story The Angel Levine is an early (and very blatant) example.
- The Cay, by Theodore Taylor, features an old black man who rescues a racist white boy who had become blinded when their ship sinks. The two live together in a tropical island and the black man lives long enough to make the boy a better person before dying in a hurricane. The book won a number of awards before suffering a backlash due to accusations of racism. Nonetheless it remains a classic children's book.
- Taylor later told the old man's backstory in the sequel/prequel, Timothy of the Cay.
- Jim from Huckleberry Finn is a nice subversion. While he is Black, and into magic, it doesn't Flanderize him and certainly isn't portrayed typically. Bonus points for averting Hollywood Voodoo.
- Hassan, from The Kite Runner. Not black (he's Hazara), but hits the rest of the criteria so heavily to demand recognition.
- Burton Galilee in Little Green Men. His great talent is said to be making white people feeling good about themselves.
- Stuart "Straight" Rathe in the Christian Underground Zealot series by Jerry Jenkins. Straight leads Paul, the white (and atheist) "hero" to Christ. He then spends his time driving Paul to chess tournaments, giving him Biblical advice on his relationship, and getting him in touch with other Christians.
- Parodied--or something--in Bill Fitzhugh's Pest Control. Just when the protagonist Bob Dillon (no relation to Bob Dylan) is at his lowest ebb, with his wife and daughter having left, and he without enough money to so much as buy a nice dinner, he stumbles upon a southern Black woman who runs the Beebe Avenue Mission. While giving him some advice, snark, and soup, she happens to mention that she opened the mission specifically to fix people's broken dreams. Which means she's not there just to help Bob, she's doing her best to help everyone. At the end of the book, Bob sends her a good portion the money he earned from faking his own assassination. She notes that she can fix a lot of dreams with this.
Live Action TV[]
- American Gothic. Although Mrs. Holt is certainly mysterious, wise, and spiritual enough to be a Magical Negro. The extent of her 'magic spell' to help sway the judge in Caleb's custody hearing is...a nice big bowl of homemade chicken soup. Aside from some hints at African tribalism in her ancestry, a bit of voodoo, and some understanding of how the Afterlife works, she dispenses only common sense advice.
- In one episode her ineffectiveness in protecting Caleb from evil is lampshaded when Buck, after being thwarted by her interference, apparently makes her verge on choking to death — presumably he does not kill her because she's that small a blip on his radar (or such a petty thing would be beneath him). And the advice she gives Caleb regarding Merlyn's spirit being laid to rest is quite sound, namely "don't mess with the dead." Too bad Caleb doesn't listen, and in trying to help her move on instead brings her back...with unfortunate results.
- By the end of the show, though, she has indeed been ditched from the plot, and without even really serving a real purpose other than to give Caleb her halfway house to stay in. We can only speculate whether her role was cut due to Executive Meddling, or if it might have been expanded had the show not been Cut Short.
- Benson is an odd subversion — it's about a wise black servant employed in the household of a wealthy governor's family, who solves all their problems. And is secretly the governor's most trusted political adviser. But unlike most Magical Negroes he is the main character and often has problems of his own to deal with, he constantly insults the Governor and the staff behind their backs and to their faces, and is often dragged into their problems whether he wants to help them or not. Eventually Benson seeks his own political office, running against his former mentor plus a dark horse in a close political race. The show was deliberately ended in a Cliff Hanger, though Word of God states that, yes, Benson did win that office.
- Bones — Referenced in an early episode, when Angela is talked out of quitting by Dr. Goodman.
Bones: What happened? |
- Chappelle's Show — Hilariously parodied and Subverted. In one sketch, Dave helps a young white woman appreciate her special gifts by showing her how they are responsible for her having a career and friends... and the only thing averting a nuclear holocaust. The subversion comes in when Dave reveals he's no angel, just a janitor.
Then how did you show me all those places? |
- Community — In the pilot episode, Jeff poses a question at a random black cafeteria worker and then apologizes by saying,
Jeff: Oh jeez, I'm sorry. I was raised on TV, and I was conditioned to believe that every black woman over 50 is a cosmic mentor |
- The Daily Show: parodied. Larry Wilmore, "Senior Black Correspondent", explicitly referenced the trope one episode. A disbelieving Jon Stewart repeated, "Magical...?" "Negro. It's okay, you can say it." "Magical...I'm sorry, I'm a little uncomfortable--" "Good. That was a test."
- A subsequent incident involving "imaginary black crime" featured the other party pointing out that the "imaginary black people who help whites", such as most Morgan Freeman characters, "aren't imaginary, they're magical!"
- On an episode of The Daily Show from around the time of Barack Obama's one-year anniversary as President, Larry Wilmore had to convince Jon Stewart that Obama was not, in fact, this trope, by painting a lackluster picture of his Presidential track record thus far.
- The show makes a convincing argument that those who voted for him expected Barack Obama to be one of these. Video here
- Mitch Benn would probably agree:
He stands for the people, they're hopin' and dreamin', |
- Examples from Degrassi High:
- Maya is a wheelchair-bound girl who is always the voice of reason in her circle of friends, and (unlike every single one of those friends) never gets a spotlight episode.
- BLT also fit this trope. He was instrumental in helping Michelle overcome her insecurities and even confront her parents about their own racism. He then helped her overcome her addiction to caffeine pills. Magnificently subverted later when BLT cheated on and dumped Michelle showing how flawed he was.
- Strangest of all is Patrick, who is a Magical Irishman. He befriends Liz and Spike (the two grimmest girls in the show). Then he teaches them to live and enjoy life again, to a degree where he's like a mild male version of the Manic Pixie Dream Girl. The effect — a boy dressed like a stock Irish laborer from old movies, singing Celtic love songs (which he writes and composes) in a thick brogue — is hard to describe. We never see him do anything that doesn't involve helping these girls, and he eventually vanishes without a trace.
- Speaking of Degrassi, Jimmy Brooks from Degrassi the Next Generation counts as well. He was pretty much always right and always good and always the voice of reason before and after he was crippled.
- Doctor Who:
- In "Remembrance of the Daleks" the Doctor is helped out by a black man who serves tea in a cafe while inexplicably offering philosophical insights based on the enslavement of his ancestors.
- Earl Sigma in the following story "The Happiness Patrol".
- Jo Martin's "Fugitive Doctor" in Series 12 and 13 of the post-2005 show. After being introduced in "Fugitive of the Judoon", the Fugitive Doctor only makes two more appearances, in "The Timeless Children" and "Once, Upon Time", where she does little more than give an inspirational pep talk to Thirteenth Doctor, a white woman.
- Firefly — Neatly subverted by Shepherd Book. He may be Serenity's resident mentor and act as The Conscience for the Caucasian crew members, but he's not the holy man he appears to be — he's the man who killed him.
- Serenity, however, is sometimes accused of reducing Book to this role. On the other hand, the scene in which he refuses to tell Mal about his background can be taken as a subversion — the classic Magical Negro would have happily told his life story and used it as a metaphor to help the white hero figure himself out.
- Heroes — Usutu in Volume 3 bears deep, deep elements of this. His sole purpose seems to be to send Parkman (and later, Hiro) on spiritual visions of the future and the past, and then die.
- And apparently the poor guy can't even rest in peace, because Volume 4 has him appearing to Parkman in visions, explaining that Matt is destined to become a prophet to the world.
- Charles Deveaux is pretty bad, too. In the season one finale, he appears in Peter Petrelli's dreams to tell him about the power of love, and about Peter's very special destiny to save the world. This is despite the fact that Peter had recently instigated a fight that ended with Charles' daughter Simone getting shot and killed. So if Charles is teaching Peter anything in his dreams, it really ought to be about the power of an incredibly pissed off father breaking a foot off in his super powered ass, but of course this is completely ignored in order to further Peter's character. Arguably, Peter hallucinated the entire conversation, in which Moral Dissonance would apply.
- Homicide: Life On the Street — Averted, in that Frank is better educated but far more egotistical than Tim. Gee is certainly wise and a mentor, but prefers to let people figure things out for themselves.
- Played for Laughs in the How I Met Your Mother "The Three Days Rule". Barney and Marshall are aided in a prank by an African-American security guard they randomly meet at the bar. At first seeming like a Scary Black Man, he turns out to have some impressive Hidden Depths, speaking with a deep, resonant voice and quotes Pablo Neruda. He then walks out of their lives... to go on a date with Robin. And as he talks away, he confesses to Robin that he doesn't even known Barney and Marshall's names.
- Key & Peele — The sketch comedy series has two such magical African-Americans fighting to the mutual death over who would get to enlighten a success-weary white man.
- The sting in the tail comes when a middle-aged black woman enters and the white man mistakes her for yet another Magical Negro, to which she replies, "Who you calling a negro, bitch?"
- Life On Mars: Nelson
Sam: What part of my subconscious do you hail from? |
- In Ashes to Ashes he turns out to be an angel.
- Lost — Rose consistently dispenses sensible, down-to-earth wisdom. She leads Charlie in prayer after his Disney Death. She mystically "knows" her husband is alive elsewhere on the island. In general, if she believes a character is good, she's correct.
- However, Rose later grew a bit, becoming a character in her own right in season 2 with a back story and her own side plot. And by season 4, she's actively snarking at Jack. And then she decides to just give up and just live in "retirement" with Bernard.
- On the other hand, it's completely subverted by Eko. While he seems to be a Magical Negro priest who tries to restore Locke's "faith", he's actually not a real priest, but a former brutal drug lord in disguise. Oh, and he's so idiotic he tries to use dynamite to blow open a blast door...
- Locke initially seems to fit the role of a strange white version of a Magical Negro, possessing mystical, almost shamanistic knowledge and a deep, unexplained communion with the island, always ready to dispense nice bits of pop-wisdom and jungle smarts...that is, until later in the series when he goes from subservient shaman spirit-guide to full-blown Messiah. And then crazy person/gullible dupe, responsible for much ill-advised Stuff Blowing Up.
- The Man Show — Parodied in a series of sketches. A hapless white guy is presented with an opportunity to cheat on his wife, and as he agonizes over the decision, a self-identified Magical Negro appears to him, sings a song about "Listening to your penis's heart," and helps him find a way to rationalize the infidelity.
- Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide — Played straight with the Lunch Lady, who occasional dispenses real, down-to-earth wisdom, but whose primary role is to divine the future through baked beans.
- New Amsterdam — The premise is that a Mighty Whitey saves the life of a Magical Native American and in return they use their magic to make him immortal. Naturally, it never occurs to them to make the members of their own tribe immortal, perhaps because the immortal magic only works on superior white genes. However, they only made him immortal until he found his true happiness (Blessed with Suck?), at which point he'd become mortal again. Since they're not around anymore, the implication is that they were already quite happy the way they were, making it less Magical Negro and more Noble Savage (recovering Magical Native American).
- A bizarre twist and possible subversion — the protagonist's mentor who gives him sagely advice and a beer whenever he needs to unwind and talk about his troubles, while a very stereotypically grizzled and kindly old black man, is also...the protagonist's son. Such are the vagaries of being an unaging immortal (the kind who can have kids but can't pass on the immortality).
- Oz: Averted. While Kareem Said is a brilliant leader and fiercely intelligent, he deals with many of his own problems. Character depth also prevents him from just being a cliche. His friendship with Tobias Beecher is also more destructive in a sense than helpful.
- Robin Hood: Brother Tuck. Yes, Tuck was turned into a Magical Negro. The fact that they dropped the "Friar" and referred to the only black man in England as a "Brother" who never once gave any kind of spiritual or moral guidance was another way in which the combined forces of Political Correctness and Narm beat this show to death.
- The Sarah Silverman Program has Sarah learn the lesson that older black women are wise beyond their years :and younger black women are prostitutes.
- Saturday Night Live — Approached directly in the monologue of an episode (hosted by Steve Buscemi) in which a bunch of character actors stand up in the audience, one of them being "Chance," the "Magical African American Character" that "chews straw and gives the pretty white guy ad-vice, and then after the ad-vice works, he disappears."
- Smallville plays this painfully straight with their take on the Martian Manhunter, who even winds up sacrificing his powers for Clark.
- Star Trek: The Next Generation — Guinan, played by Whoopi Goldberg, is an El-Aurian, a member of a race with an almost supernatural sense of time and space. She's Picard's Black Best Friend, but she's happy to give a Whoopi Epiphany Speech to anyone who asks--or anyone else she thinks needs one. She can tell when history has been altered, has centuries of experience and accumulated skills, is a better shot than the Enterprise's chief of security, and is the only person on the ship that scares Q. Despite the fact that she could probably replace anyone on the crew, she chooses to work as a bartender in Ten Forward.
- However, while Guinan fits the trope closely enough to be a definite example, she's also a little more complex than most Magical Negroes — it's strongly implied that she led her own long life of adventure and heroism before settling down as a bartender, and on rare occasions she does realize she was wrong about something instead of being mysteriously right all the time.
- True Blood — In the first season, Tara's mother; an abusive alcoholic ultra-catholic woman, becomes a "normal person" after an afro-american voodoo lady who lives in the middle of the forest exorcises the "demon" she had inside. Subverted; she is just a normal person who works on a drug store; she uses the voodoo thing to maintain her children; the exorcism wasn't real ... Or was it?
- The Twilight Zone — Inverted in the 1980s version. The episode "Paladin of the Lost Hour" had a magical white man (who does double duty as The Obi-Wan) help the young black protagonist find his destiny.
- In the short story upon which the episode is based, author Harlan Ellison states, "One of these men was black, the other white" and refuses to say which one is which. Of course, for a visual medium, they had to make a choice, and it seems that they deliberately chose to avoid the trope.
- The Vampire Diaries has a bit of an issue with this. They made almost all the witches black (and almost all the black people witches). They made almost all the witches spend their time helping white people and rarely using their powers for their own benefit, or even for the "balance" they're supposed to be preserving. Notably, Emily Bennett worked as Katherine's handmaid as well as using her powers to provide her and other vampires immunity from sunlight. Why she would do this despite obviously not approving of vampires eating people is apparently a I Owe You My Life situation that is never expanded on. The subtext isn't really helped by the series being set in the American South.
- Weeds — Heylia subverts this thoroughly; she's always giving Nancy advice both on pot dealing and on life in general, but whenever it looks like the show might follow this trope, she proves that while she likes Nancy well enough, it's ultimately a business relationship and her first priority is herself and her own family. Whenever Nancy can't pay for her product, she either takes something for collateral or simply tells her "Tough shit."
- A Wizard of Earth Sea — Ogion the Silent becomes this in the Scifi Channel's version of Ursula K. Le Guin's monumental. Go here, here and here for a detailed analysis of the racial miscasting in Earthsea.
Theater[]
- Played oddly straight by the black playwright August Wilson, many of whose Century Cycle plays include characters of this nature as parts of all-or-nearly-all-black casts (Stool Pigeon in King Hedley II, Elder Barlow in Radio Golf, Aunt Ester in Gem of the Ocean and offstage in other plays).
- Papa, the old steam engine from the musical Starlight Express, although he at least takes part in one race (and wins). In the original London cast, Rusty, the young steam engine under his tutelage, was also black, but later productions cast white actors as Rusty....
Video Games[]
- Literally true but otherwise completely inverted by Akafubu from Golden Sun: The Lost Age, who is a (fantasy tribal-African) Mars Adept with typical Mars Adept personality, only helps Felix unwittingly and indirectly, and thinks it unfair that his people's deity wants to reward Felix, a foreigner, for doing all the actual work.
- Silent Hill: Downpour has Howard Blackwood, who first appeared in the comic Silent Hill: Past Life. He's a mailman who appears to be oblivious to everything going on in town, but still dispenses some wisdom the protagonist, Murphy. This is because he's a manifestation of the town and has been present since before 1867. The Full Circle ending also implies that he was the Hero of Another Story, but failed and became trapped in Silent Hill limbo as a result.
Web Comic[]
- The doctor in Pockett seems to be one of these.
Web Original[]
- Spoofed by Cracked.com, who pointed out some of the Unfortunate Implications of this trope in their list of Hollywood's 6 Favorite Offensive Stereotypes.
- How to Kill a Mockingbird jokingly portrays Calpurnia this way.
- The Comics Curmudgeon's description of "Clambake" from Gil Thorp:
Clambake pretty much exudes that vibe, associated with nice old black men in too many movies and books to count, of “Here’s a nice old black man who’s going to help you white people solve your problems with his folk wisdom/instinctive understanding of human nature/magical powers, but isn’t going to do anything to make you uncomfortable, like have sex with white women or vote or speak in that damn ‘izzle’ language.” |
Western Animation[]
- This is one trope that The Simpsons did not subvert for the first time, though they did have fun with it. Lisa Simpson had her own personal Magical Negro in the form of Bleedin' Gums Murphy, who noted that she should listen when people tell her to brush her teeth and that she sang the blues pretty good for someone with no actual problems.
- They finally did outright subvert this in the episode "Brawl in the Family", with the character Gabriel, an apparent Magical Negro (who Homer thinks is an angel) and social worker assigned to help the family with their dysfunction. He's also voiced by Delroy Lindo. Homer expressly compares him to the aforementioned Bagger Vance example. Gabriel, confronted by Homer's long lost Vegas wife, gives up on the family, telling Homer, "Your seed should be wiped from the Earth!"
- The Wrong Coast had one movie parody with the title Magical Black Men. Starring Morgan Freeman, Will Smith, Don Cheadle and Lawrence Fishburne (all four of which are or have been typecast into this trope) teaming up to solve the problems of white men in a moral crisis.
- Subverted and parodied by Toots in Clone High. Toots is a blind jazz clarinetist who tries to give sagely advice, and really, really fails.
- Subverted by Chef of South Park', whose advice usually amounts to him singing passionate soul songs about sex. That, or imparting information an 8-year-old really shouldn't know.
Stan: "Chef, how can I get a girl to like me?" |
- And on one occasion where Chef could have given Stan useful information, he didn't.
Chef: "Hello there, children!" |
- Inverted in Yvon of the Yukon; the title character, a ludicrously uncouth, unkempt, vulgar and crusty Frenchman becomes a "sagely" mentor to the thoroughly ordinary teenager Tommy, who happens to be Inuit.
- Somewhat parodied with Mashed Potato Johnson on Metalocalypse, in that he gives the boys advice on how to become successful blues musicians, when they're already the most popular musicians in history.
- Played with in season four of The Venture Brothers: Hank wonders if the UPS man is psychic, and Dr. Venture points out "Just because he's black doesn't mean he has the Shining!" Turns out, he does.
- Zecora from My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic hovers somewhere between playing this straight and subverting it. (Technically, she's a zebra, but they're a Fantasy Counterpart Culture for Africa.) While everypony is incredibly suspicious of her due to Fantastic Racism and the belief that she's an "evil enchantress", it's discovered that she's actually a friendly herbalist, and from then on she's happy to assist the mane characters. If there's a problem that needs a magical solution, she's generally got an answer, and also serves largely to warn and advise the protagonists, particularly Twilight. Slightly subverted in that there are some problems, like parasprites, even she knows nothing about, and lampshaded when Applejack wonders if she has a "zebra sense" that lets her know when there's problems to be solved.